MEPs want booze to carry calorie labels

Lawmakers in Brussels have called for beer, wine and spirit makers to label their drinks so people can see how many calories they contain. Most alcoholic drinks up to now have been exempt from displaying this information.

Although food and soft drinks must by law list their ingredients
and nutritional information, alcoholic drinks that contain more
than 1.2 percent alcohol by volume have been exempt.

The EU parliament Wednesday voted in favor of a resolution which
calls on the European Commission to prepare new legislation by
next year.

BEUC a European consumer’s organization said that with the
continent facing an obesity crisis, clear calorie labeling for
alcohol has become a necessity.

“When people think of calorific drinks, softs drinks spring
to mind. But a single large glass of wine contains as many
calories as a chocolate bar. The paradox of alcohol being exempt
from calorie and ingredient labeling that is mandatory for soft
drinks is unjustifiable,” BEUC Director General Monique
Goyens said in a statement.

Fiona Sim, the chairwoman of the Royal Society for Public Health,
wrote in the British Medical Journal this week that among adults
who drink, 10 percent of their daily calorie intake comes from
alcohol.

Yet, according to the BBC, a recent survey found that out of
2,117 adults questioned, 80 percent of them did not know that
alcohol contributed to the amount of calories they consumed.

A large glass of wine is roughly the equivalent in calories to a
doughnut, while a half liter glass of beer is the same as a
packet of crisps, according to data from Drinkaware and the Royal
Society of Public Health.